Getting In To Affordable Art

The Affordable Art Show movement is taking off. The shows are “now a regular event in London and New York and six months ago he tested the water in Sydney, attracting 13,000 visitors and selling more than $4 million worth of art. Now it’s Melbourne’s turn, with the Royal Exhibition Building playing host to works from 120 galleries, 500 artists – and nothing more than $5000.”

Scottish Opera On The Line

“Scottish Opera has, for reasons hard to discern, acquired pariah status. No one will speak up for it. Less than a year after the triumphant conclusion of its Ring Cycle, generally held to be one of the great post-war Wagner productions, it is cast in the role of profligate – elitist, unpopular, and irrelevant. Apparently unwilling to conform to the demands of contemporary cultural policy, it has retreated into the ranks of the untouchables, tarred with the great New Labour crime of being non-inclusive. The time has come, say its critics, to shrug it off, to clear it from the desk, to consign it to outer darkness. Except that no one can quite bring themselves to say so.”

University Buys Murdoch Library

The University of Surrey has bought the personal library of writer Iris Murdoch. “The collection of more than 1,000 books – many of them with her own remarks in the margins – surrounded and influenced her from 1952, when she began writing the first of her 26 novels, until a few years before she died of Alzheimer’s disease in 1999.”

Peabody’s New Face

Baltimore’s Peabody Institute “unveils nearly $27 million worth of campus renovations, the most extensive and expensive construction project since the institution opened in 1866.” The school campus has looked in for decades, and the renovations are designed to reconnect with the community.

Nielsen People Meters Under Attack

The Nielsen company’s new “people meters” to monitor TV viewership have come “under attack from television networks, minority groups and even lawmakers when a test of its electronic “people meters,” newly installed in select New York homes, began reporting a sharp decrease in viewership for television shows that feature minorities. Because the current system — a decades-old technique involving week-long diaries that are mailed to the homes — had never yielded such a drastic swing, the critics contended that the new technique must somehow be unreliable.”

On Pop Culture And The Art Of

John Rockwell: “Pop culture is not necessarily interesting in itself: it’s merely an index of the state of the broader social culture, or a way to sell newspapers or CD’s or commercials. The trouble with that mercantile mindset is that the popular arena is indeed the source of some of the best art out there, and artistic excellence calls forth smart criticism. Even elitist criticism — the kind produced by critics who love popular art but scorn the populace as a bunch of Menckenesque rubes easily manipulated by commercial interests.”

No TV For Kids?

Should parents not let their toddlers watch TV? That’s what the new study says. “It’s worth remembering that there are some significant flaws in the study, including that results were based solely on interviews with children’s parents, who may not have accurately recollected how much television their kids watch. Still, it’s hard to ignore the findings that, of 1,345 children ages 1 and 3, the risk of developing attention problems by age 7 increased by roughly 10 percent for every hour of television watched daily.”

Indian History Turns Up In Shops

“As works of art and artifacts continue to disappear from Indian temples, smaller museums, art galleries, and from the country’s numerous palaces, often with the help of local communities, India is fast turning out to be a rich and inexpensive picking ground for antiques. It is easy to get hold of a piece of Indian history: all one needs to do is visit the souvenir shops.”